- Occupy St. Louis
-
Occupy St. Louis Part of Occupy movement Date 1 October 2011 – present
( 0 years, 52 days)Location Kiener Plaza, downtown St. Louis, Missouri, USA
38°37′34″N 90°11′31″W / 38.626°N 90.192°WStatus Ongoing Causes Economic inequality, corporate influence over government, financialization, inter alia Goals Social democracy, community development, inter alia Characteristics Demonstration, occupation, protest, protest march, street protesters, guerrilla theater, consumer activism, strike actions, walkouts Arrests / Injuries Arrests: 52+ Occupy St. Louis (OccupySTL) is an ongoing postpartisan people's movement and peaceful protest that began on October 1, 2011 against corporate greed, its influence over the economy, its corruption of government, and ensuing inequality. Although people possess differing viewpoints and diversity of views is a central tenet, commonly held themes seek an equal playing field in the economy with more equal opportunities for all people as well as accountability for corporate and financial malfeasance. Many of those in the movement argue that structural, systemic change is necessary and that incremental reform is insufficient and in any case not possible without popular countervailing power to the power of moneyed interests. Occupy St. Louis is in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement. It is located at Kiener Plaza in downtown St. Louis near an area which includes many financial institutions such as commercial banks and the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.[1]
Contents
Overview
Occupy St. Louis consists of autonomous individuals coming together to address common concerns. It uses its own flavor of consensus decision-making and is a horizontal organization utilizing facilitators in lieu of leaders and has no official spokesperson.[1]
The encampment has consisted of more than fifty tents with a couple hundred continuous occupiers and many hundreds more activists. Several families have occupied the space long term. The demographics consist of students from area colleges and high schools, a large racial mix, many people of various ages and class backgrounds, laborers, professionals, large numbers of both employed and unemployed, the underemployed, military veterans, some homeless, as well as those of diverse sexual orientations.[2] People have joined from some distance around the region in addition to the city and metropolitan areas. With the exceptions of views promoting violence or hatred, Occupy St. Louis is open to all political beliefs with Democrats, Republicans, independents, Greens, liberals, progressives, conservatives, libertarians, socialists, anarchists, communists, and the previously nonpolitical, among others, represented among those in the movement.
Actions held by Occupy St. Louis include the occupation of Kiener Plaza, civil disobedience, demonstrations, protest marches, and picketing. OccupySTL has acted in solidarity with at least two strike actions and walkouts and has been supported by various trade unions and many individual unionists from the region. OccupySTL is participating in moving money from large commercial retail banks (in particular, Bank of America) to local credit unions or community oriented banks. It participated in Bank Transfer Day on November 5, 2011. It has also supported and directly assisted a number of families unfairly foreclosed upon.
A large rally and march in alliance with area unions held on October 14 attracted around 1000 people.[3] OccupySTL participated in a rally and march as part of the November 17 Day of Action across the United States and world. This was in conjunction with the Occupy movement as well as local unions, MoveOn.org, and PROMO, among other organizations participating but not necessarily intercoordinating. Approximately 1,000 people marched from Kiener Plaza to the Martin Luther King Bridge, passing by various financial institutions and the regional Federal Reserve Bank before 14 were arrested for blocking traffic on one onramp of the bridge to highlight neglect of infrastructure and jobs.[4] Banners were also unveiled on area overpasses and, later in the evening, from the old Municipal Courts Building adjacent to city hall.
There are educational efforts such as daily teach-ins from a variety of organizations. A food tent was established to feed occupiers (as well as some of the city homeless). An on-site library of pamphlets, periodicals, and books has also operated.[1]
Incidents and arrests
Occupy St. Louis initially faced a small number of citations and arrests for violation of the curfew at Kiener Plaza, a city park. Thereafter until November 11, however, the response from the St. Louis Police Department and Mayor Francis G. Slay had been relatively less repressive than that of many other cities and there were no large scale arrests, raids, or police violence.[5] The mayor eventually blogged and city officials indicated to the media a list of violations, which was challenged by OccupySTL, as well as an ultimatum that occupiers vacate the plaza after curfew and remove all tents.[6] After 11 pm on Veterans Day, the St. Louis police faced a crowd of about 400 to raid the plaza, arresting approximately 27, and confiscating (with the city parks department) the materials of occupiers left on site. Although there was no rough treatment of people by the police, some of these materials were thrown into garbage trucks and crushed despite explicit assurances that all items would be bagged and tagged for later retrieval by owners.[7] OccupySTL marched in solidarity with the Veterans Day march earlier in the day but its activists challenged pervasive neglect of veterans.[8] Since the the Veterans Days eviction, Kiener Plaza has been continuously patrolled by park rangers and the city police who have strictly enforced the ban on tents and the 10 pm-6 am curfew. A preliminary injunction filed pro bono on behalf of Occupy St. Louis to cease enforcement of the curfew by arguing violation of First Amendment speech rights was denied in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri.[9]
As the movement is of an open, non-hierarchical organizational structure and is still emerging, there has been some internal conflict, inconsistent organization, and fluctuation in numbers actively engaged in the movement. A few weeks into the occupation a growing number of unruly people caused disruptions and a handful of thefts although this was largely mitigated after a few days. Several of those arriving reported that belligerent street people have been encouraged by the police to go to Kiener Plaza. Police in other cities have also encouraged aggressive people with behavioral and addiction problems to go to and, in some cases, have dropped people off at occupations.
See also
Occupy articles
- List of global Occupy protest locations
- Occupy movement
- Timeline of Occupy Wall Street
- We are the 99%
Other Protests
- 15 October 2011 global protests
- 1877 Saint Louis general strike
- 2011 United States public employee protests
- 2011 Wisconsin protests
Related articles
References
- ^ a b c "OccupySTL.org". Occupy St. Louis. http://www.occupystl.org/. Retrieved 2011-11-16.
- ^ Silverberg, Jennifer; Tony D'Souza (November 10, 2011). "Occupants: Portraits from the protest". Riverfront Times (St. Louis, MO). http://www.riverfronttimes.com/2011-11-10/news/occupy-st-louis-protest-99-percent-portraits-profiles/.
- ^ Mannies, Jo (October 14, 2011). "Occupy St. Louis briefly occupies downtown streets for rally and march". St. Louis Beacon (St. Louis, MO). http://www.stlbeacon.org/region/113601-occupy-st-louis-briefly-occupies-downtown-streets-for-rally-and-march.
- ^ Fowler, Nancy (November 17, 2011). "Occupy StL protesters joined by labor, others, to push for jobs". St. Louis Beacon (St. Louis, MO). http://www.stlbeacon.org/issues-politics/112-region/114286-occupy-stl-protesters-joined-by-labor-others-to-push-for-jobs.
- ^ Mann, Jennifer (October 27, 2011). "Cities begin removing Occupy protesters". St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, MO). http://www.stltoday.com/news/national/cities-begin-removing-occupy-protesters/article_769fa473-ea61-5c08-9c2c-b434b838ea01.html.
- ^ Garrison, Chad (November 8, 2011). "Occupy St. Louis Accuses Mayor of Kowtowing to Corporations". Riverfront Times (St. Louis, MO). http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2011/11/occupy_st_louis_charges_mayor_slay_with_violations.php.
- ^ D'Souza, Tony (November 12, 2011). "27 Occupiers Arrested As Police Enforce Kiener Plaza Curfew". Riverfront Times (St. Louis, MO). http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2011/11/occupy_st_louis_arrests_kiener_plaza.php.
- ^ Mann, Jennifer (November 12, 2011). "Police arrest Occupy St. Louis protesters". St. Louis Post-Dispatch (St. Louis, MO). http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/police-arrest-occupy-st-louis-protesters/article_8bc55bfc-0c9e-11e1-b678-0019bb30f31a.html.
- ^ Mannies, Jo (November 15, 2011). "Occupy St. Louis tells judge that tents are part of its message". St. Louis Beacon (St. Louis, MO). http://www.stlbeacon.org/issues-politics/112-region/114225-occupy-st-louis-tells-judge-that-tents-part-of-its-message. Retrieved 2011-11-16.
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Categories:- 2011 in Missouri
- Occupy movement in the United States
- History of St. Louis, Missouri
- Culture of St. Louis, Missouri
- Organizations based in St. Louis, Missouri
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